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March 16, 2017

NASA's GPM analyzed rainfall in ex-Tropical Cyclone 11S

On Mar. 14 at 2356 UTC (7:56 p.m. EST), GPM saw rain falling at a rate of over 205 mm (8 inches) in a few storms west of the center, where some storm tops in in 11s were reaching heights above 13 km (8 miles). Credit: NASA/JAXA
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On Mar. 14 at 2356 UTC (7:56 p.m. EST), GPM saw rain falling at a rate of over 205 mm (8 inches) in a few storms west of the center, where some storm tops in in 11s were reaching heights above 13 km (8 miles). Credit: NASA/JAXA

Ex-tropical cyclone 11S was still generating some heavy rainfall, despite losing its tropical status and becoming a sub-tropical storm when the GPM core satellite passed overhead. The Global Precipitation Measurement mission or GPM core satellite passed over the remnant low pressure area and analyzed the rain the system was generating.

The GPM core observatory flew above the remnants of tropical cyclone 11S on March 14, 2017 at 2356 UTC (7:56 p.m. EST). The remnants were located south-southeast of Madagascar and were rapidly transforming from a sub-tropical into an extra-tropical low pressure area.

GPM is a joint mission between NASA and the Japanese space agency JAXA.

GPM detected some locations of intense rainfall still being produced by the low. GPM's Dual-Frequency Precipitation Radar (DPR) data showed that rain in some areas was falling at a rate of over 205 mm (8 inches) in a few storms. GPM satellite (DPR Ku Band) data were used to examine heavy precipitation and found it around the low area's western side. GPM's radar (DPR Ku Band) found that some storm tops in in 11s were reaching heights above 13 km (8 miles).

By March 16, the storm had become extra-tropical.

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